Archive for May 2008

Software Alone Won’t Cure Your Marketing Blues

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Via the Inside CRM Blog, I found this list of of the Top 10 marketing-related frustrations. The list came from a survey conducted by Infusionsoft in the 2008 U.S. Small Business Marketing Frustration Survey. Here is the list:

  1. Too difficult to follow up with cold, warm and lukewarm leads consistently and efficiently
  2. Can’t properly track and manage prospects and customers
  3. Need to integrate online and offline marketing efforts
  4. Poor email deliverability
  5. Too much manual grunt work in the sales and marketing process, no automation
  6. Can’t track sales activity
  7. Lack of centralization, too many different programs and systems
  8. Too costly to maintain servers and IT staff
  9. Too difficult to manually manage multichannel campaigns
  10. One-dimensional marketing

I’ve seen a number of articles and posts commenting on how CRM software can solve these frustrations. In my experience, it’s not the lack of software that causes frustration for small business owners, rather the frustration stems from the over-abundance of software and features available.  Combine this "everything but the kitchen sink" approach to CRM software with the general lack of a systemized approach to marketing prior to selecting software, and it’s easy to see why CRM projects can give small business owners fits.

When there is not a process in place to automate, installing a CRM product becomes overwhelming because not only do you need to learn how to use the new tool, you also need to create your marketing process(es). This tends to lead to a backwards deployment model where first we pick a cool feature of the software and then we try to figure out how to use it to market our business. Regular readers here will recognize this as the familiar problem theme of selecting tactics without first having a strategy.

Here are a few other comments I have about this list as it pertains to small businesses that I work with, particularly service based businesses.

Looking at the list above, items 1,2, and 6 , which all have to do with tracking and following up, are not problems that stem from lack of software. They can easily be handled with a Big Chief Tablet, a #2 pencil, and a consistently executed process. Software can make these jobs easier, but you need to have a process before you can automate it.

Items 3, 8, 9, and 10 sound a little bit to me like items that a software company would put on a list for people to rank. Or, they may be the frustrations of those companies at the larger end of the small business market spectrum.

#4, e-mail delivery, particularly bulk e-mail, is one area where I think small business owners should look to outside help rather than trying to  do it themselves. We take sending e-mails for granted, but maintaining your lists, properly handling unsubscribe requests, and working to make sure your messages get delivered (and you are not flagged as a spammer) take more effort than you may think. Companies like iContact (and many others) have many people dedicated to making sure your messages are delivered.

#5, too much grunt work – again, I’m all for automating sales and marketing processes to remove grunt work (my 12 year career as a software developer was born out of my desire to eliminate grunt work from the auditing process), I just think it’s important to have a process before you try to throw software at the problem.

#7, centralization – In my experience, when small business owners say they have too many programs and systems, what they mean is they have too many (software) tools. In my opinion, things like ACT! or Outlook with Business Contact Manager, or SalesForce.com are not systems – they are tools that you can use to automate, report on, and manage your  marketing system.

I don’t want to sound like I’m anti-software, far from it. I have just found that a great source of frustration comes from purchasing marketing automation tools before there is a marketing plan or processes to automate. As I mentioned in this previous post, I think the right approach is have a process first, and then pick the right tools to help you automate that processes.

The Power of the Press Release

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

This recent article in Website magazine lists their top 5 reasons to write a Press Release as:

  1. a way to generate organic traffic
  2. link building
  3. reputation management
  4. attracting bloggers and web 2.0 audience
  5. draw traffic from traditional media

Granted this is a magazine about web sites, but there is one huge benefit missing from this list – the power of having your story told by another person.

Actually, there are two benefits in the sentence above. The first is the power of the story. We all want our marketing messages to be remembered and using a story is one of the more powerful ways of conveying your message and having people remember it. People love stories, so use them in your marketing.

Second is the power of having your story told by someone else. I can create marketing materials all day long that tell you how wonderful my company is – how I have "great customer service", etc. My message will never be as powerful as the story of someone experiencing my customer service, who I was able to help when they were really feeling desperate and we were able to pull off the job in the nick of time. Now have a newspaper or magazine print that story and it becomes an even more powerful tool for creating "Know, Like, and Trust".

Don’t dismiss press releases as tools that are only for the big companies – they are a powerful tool that can help small business owners attract more customers and make a few more trips to the bank.

My friend and fellow Duct Tape Marketing Coach in Connecticut, Bill Doerr, has posted a great video titled Marketing 101 for Business Professionals and Service Providers. If you have a service business or practice and you want to grow your clientele by design rather than by accident, then Bill’s video is a must see.

In addition to being a great educational piece, Bill also has a very special, limited time offer that he makes at the end of this video presentation. I don’t want to spoil it here, but it really is a sweet deal – a "no-brainer" for anyone who wants a step by step program, along with supporting tools, for getting more clients now.

Click here to view Marketing 101

Go To Brand School – KC Area Event

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Here is an educational opportunity for readers in the Kansas City area. As part of their "Know Business" workshop series, First National Bank of Olathe will feature Rick Nobles of Patron Insight who will take participants back to "Brand School". During this workshop, participants will complete a series of hands-on exercises to learn:

  • What is a brand?
  • What goes into a brand?
  • Why is branding so important?
  • What is my brand?

To RSVP for this event, call Shirley Holmes at 913-791-9213. Here are the rest of the event particulars:

Date: Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Time: Registration 11:15 to 11:30, Lunch & Workshop 11:30 to 12:30, Networking 12:30 to 1:00

Where: Radisson Lenexa-Overlank Park, 12601 West 95th Street, Lenexa

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Categories : Kansas City, Marketing

Awake At The Wheel – Book Review

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Mitchell Ditkoff’s Awake At The Wheel: Getting your Great Ideas Rolling (in an Uphill World) is a book about the creative process and how you can use the creative process to develop your ideas and bring them to fruition. Ditkoff wrote this book to help “close the gap between thought and action”, and I think this book accomplishes that goal.

This book is divided in two 3 sections. The first section is a fable about a Neanderthal name Og and his struggles with being consumed with a breakthrough idea and his struggles to make it a reality. I found the use of the fable a refreshing change makes for an easy read while doing a good job of communicating the authors ideas.

The second section of the book outlines 12 Best Practices for developing and manifesting your inspired ideas.

The third section of the book is a creative thinking “toolbox” that outlines 35 tools you can use to develop, nurture, and manifest your own breakthrough ideas.

I thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend this book!

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Categories : Books

Customers or Clients

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

This is a copy of a post I made a year ago, but since I seem to be having this discussion with a lot of folks recently, I thought I would repost it today. Incidentally, the folks at Versage do a much better job of making this argument than I do, so I encourage you to visit their web site.

People often ask me why I use the word customer rather than client to describe the people I work with. I don’t intend to start a religious war with this post, but I do think the words we use are important. So here are some of the reasons that I think customer is the more appropriate word.

Customer comes from the word "custom" which means habit or something done regularly. I want the people that I do business with to buy from me on a regular basis.

Client, from the Latin cliens, means "dependent" or "follower". A client is also a person who is receiving services from a social services agency. This in no way describes the relationship that I want to have with people who do business with me.

When I was growing up, prostitutes had clients; banks had customers.

I’ve always believed that a business exists to create value for its customers. Using the word "customer" constantly reminds me of this mantra.

The difference between a customer and a client is often described by the level of service provided by the seller of the product. I have spent my entire career in industries that called their customers "clients" (or some label other than customer). On more than one occasion I have been corrected for calling them customers. I always thought it odd that the person who bought our products and services should get a different label depending upon how we treated them. We just sell products to customers – clients deserve more attention and better service. It’s as if it was decided that we needed to label those who we will treat poorly vs. those we will treat well. I don’t think we needed a new word for customer; we just need to treat our customers better.

Those who buy from us are people – people, who determine the value of our products and services. People who are entitled to judge the quality of the experience we deliver. People who decide whether to do business with us. In my opinion, "customer" describes this idea of the need to serve people and continually earn their business better than "client", which hints at the attitude "they better do what I tell them to do if they want me the privilege of working with me".

Another definition that I’ve heard is that customers buy products and clients buy services. In today’s world the line between products and services is becoming more blurred; more businesses are selling product\service packages. I think this trend will continue and defining customers this way will become more irrelevant.

Those are the main reasons that I prefer to use the word "customer" rather than "client". I still slip once and a while (I blame it on my CPA training) and use "client", but whenever I am corrected for using the word "customer" I tend to push back for the reasons stated above.

So, what about you? Do you have customers or clients?

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Categories : Marketing